Category Archives: Technology in Education

WRDSB Libraries on the Go

Our new library system at WRDSB comes mobile ready.  The free  ILS  app (iOS and Android) is easy to download and set up.  iOS users should note that the iPhone version of the app is also used on the iPad so the search settings in the app store may need adjusting to locate that app on an iPad.

ILS-1

Once the app is downloaded, launch it, choose the Waterloo Region District School Board from the school board list. Next,   press the  ‘choose library’ icon to select your school library and set it as the default.

ILS-3

As an example,  I choose the  Huron Heights SS  library and set it to my default library.

ILS-5

This is a sample search result based on “world war 2”.

ILS-6

Now you are ready for searching on the go. Happy inquiring!

~Mark

Web 2.0ing your staff meetings

I had an awesome conversation with WRDSB  Principal Mark McMath after school today. Over the fall, he has been experimenting with some ideas for bringing staff meetings to life by making them more interactive and focused on discussion rather than information distribution. Check out these great ideas!

  • collaborate on generating agendas by leveraging Google Docs
  • gather good news itmes through a shared Google Doc – check out this  Sample Good News doc
  • share links to video resources in a shared document
  • use  Today’s Meet  to generate a back channel discussion
  • summarize group discussion in an online (Google) doc
  • gather feedback via Google Forms
  • create a staff  video message  using a tool such as  ScreenCast-o-matic

Mark has enjoyed learning through his Professional Learning Network (PLN) on Twitter too.  He has found that Twitter connections provide a wealth of knowledge for personal use and sharing with staff.   He notes the importance of gaining comfort in jumping in and out of the information flow as it can be overwhelming.

Additional Resources

Follow  Mark McMath  on Twitter

Follow Cedarbrae PS on Twitter

Follow the #edwrdsb Twitter hashtag

~Mark

Connecting Students with Google Hangouts

After 2 days of being immersed in conversation about technology enabled learning, focusing on using technology to get to deeper learning, and engage the relationship aspect of the possibilities with George Couros, I was thrilled to hear how WRDSB  teacher Ryan Wettlaufer is using Google Hangouts with his students.

To me, this is a perfect example of the SAMR model.  Ryan has thoughtfully and skillfully created real life opportunities for his students by leveraging his personal learning network (PLN) giving his French language program a whole new meaning.  I was able to connect with Ryan for an interview via Google Hangouts.  Learn about Ryan’s insights in our interview.

Thank you Ryan for taking time to share your leadership and best practices, and a perfect topic for Connected Educators month.

~Mark

CASA13: An important remix

As June came to a close, I eagerly anticipated my attendance at the CASA conference as a good learning opportunity and to present with Ed Doadt on the use of social media in the classroom and school community.   With a conference title of Pedagogy to Technology &  Hardware to Headware  I certainly felt some great learning and networking opportunities would unfold.

I must admit that I was taken aback by the approach taken in the keynote address.  The intent may very well have been to cause people to stop, reflect, and engage in meaningful dialogue about the use of technology to support student learning, but the rather hard nosed approach taken seemed to disengage the audience. Although several key points were made, including:

  • innovation has a high failure rate
  • technology is an expensive and ongoing investment
  • the “light house” approach typically ends up as a moth balled project that went nowhere
  • improvement strategies in education must be based on the best instructional and assessment practices

the message seemed to be stay out of this arena and focus on aspects of education that are already proven by research.  Two important questions emerged from this framework: a) why would we (educators) get into the innovation game in K-12 education where funds are limited?, and b) where is the research that demonstrates technology makes a difference?

The audience reaction was rather subdued and there was a smattering of polite applause.  While a few people offered up examples where technology was making an observable difference in student learning, the comments were essentially shot down based on statements of “lack of research”.  There was a real sense of disconnect in the room. The view presented was polarized relative to current directions and thinking in this area by many.  Audience member and conference presenter  George Couros ended the session with a very important point: learning with technology is significantly different than learning about technology.

I have been reflecting on this scenario since attending the conference trying to sort through the various perspectives that come into play.  First off, I don’t think anyone would debate the 4 bulleted points outlined above. These are known facts that are well researched and documented.  Teaching and learning with technology must be done well, and in the framework of best instructional and assessment practices.  Learning WITH technology IS different:  it is about NEW possibilities. The SAMR model, as described in the diagram below, offers a great way to define stages of development in terms of how well technology may be used to support learning.

SAMRgraphic

Yet, there is this nagging question: why do educators want to move in this direction if it does not make any difference?  So many people I talked to indicate that technology DOES make a difference in how students learn.  Many shared reports that perceptual, observation based, focus group data etc. indeed show differences in this area.

After chatting with several people after the presentation and some personal reflection time, I think there is an important perspective missing:  the timing of the research (assuming that this should be researched at all).

REMIX:  In reality, we are still in the infancy in this area of teaching and learning with technology.  We need to apply the right lens and connect the dots differently. Why? Learning how to use technology effectively in education is NOT wild reckless expensive innovation in my opinion.  It is about doing things differently and exploring new possibilities.  We are not at a point in time where enough teachers use technology effectively in their practice. To me, it would make sense that if one researches and measures the effectiveness of technology  now, the results may indeed be somewhat marginal. Then again, if any educational tool/resource is used ineffectively, research will show that the impact of that tool/resource is marginal.

So Now What?  We need to consider the way in which the term innovate is used in the context of education.  Like it or not, technology is here to stay.  Learning to use it effectively is not reckless innovation or transformation.  We need to learn how to leverage it in the most effective ways possible. This means trying things, and sharing the learnings — blogging about is would be great!  I believe we need to invest in teacher training, close the gap, and raise the bar in the area of technology use. Continuing to gather data and formalizing research is a ‘must do’.  Every educator needs to commit to sharing their learnings and best practices (add another plug for blogging).

Finally, in the keynote, technology was portrayed as the big bad beast:  you were IN or OUT. I strongly believe that we  can not look at this sandbox stage as some definitive point of decision.  We do need to continue leveraging learning WITH technology, exploring new possibilities and sharing.

Perhaps it is time to throw a technology challenge on the table:  eliminate technology from your line of work and personal use for a month  — no corresponding, collaborating, note taking, internet enabled research/fact finding, analysing, exploring, reading, social media, email … well you get the picture.  At the end of the month, reflect on whether or not technology makes a difference to how you work, then share your learnings by commenting on this blog post.

I also wanted to share a few notable quotes from the #CASA13 Twitter stream from this session.

<insert screen caps from storify> 

CASA13-1

CASA13-2

CASA13-3

CASA13-4

CASA13-5

CASA13-6

CASA13-7

Other Resources

SAMR model resources from Scoop.it

Happy reading and reflecting

~Mark

Jenni van Rees: Blogging with primary students

Meet Jenni van Rees.

JVR

After a casual conversation at  Ed Camp Hamilton,  and some email correspondence, I arranged to do an interview with  WRDSB  teacher Jenni van Rees to further explore her work in blogging with her grade one students. The interview was initially done live on the internet on QueST Radio 1-24 .   The audio recording is now available as a resource to this blog post, and will also be rebroadcast on QueST Radio 1-24.  Watch radio.markwcarbone.ca , Twitter and G+ for announcements.

Guiding Questions for the Interview

1. Introductions

2. Professional technology interests

3. What drove your interest in getting your students online and blogging?

4. Administrative support?

5. What did you do in the area of communications with parents?

6. Describe/share how this has worked, benefits to students,

7. Did anything surprise you? anything unexpected happen?

8. How did you prepare the students in the area of digital citizenship?

9. Based on the results, will you continue to encorporate blogging as part of your instructional practice?

10. Closing comments.

Jenni provided excellent insights into these interview questions.  Hear her thoughts on professional learning, role modelling, real world audience, digital citizenship and PLNs in the  QueST Radio 1-24 broadcast recording .

Related Resources

Jenni’s class website

Jenni’s student blogging site

Jenni’s professional blog: Thinking about Teaching.

Collaborating with Division 18 in B.C.

Follow Jenni on Twitter

Follow Jenni’s on class on Twitter

Kathy Cassidy’s Connected from the Start: Global Learning in the Primary Grades

Happy learning.

~Mark

Resources for Compass For Success Presentation

 Slide Show

Tweet Anatomy

Digital Footprint 

My Digital Footprint by George Couros
Your Digital Footprint by Diana Graber

Twitter Resources

Twitter Guide Book by Mashable
Twitter Basics (pdf)
Twitter 101 (pdf)
Twitter Essentials
Leveraging Your Twitter Experience

~Mark

Reflections on Ed Camp Hamilton

Saturday May 4th, beautiful sunny weather, no humidity and roughly 150 energized educators at Ancaster Sr. Public School to participate in Ed Camp Hamilton.

edcamp-attending

First, hats off to the organizing committee for planning a great event  — lots of positive energy and opportunity for networking —  take a bow.

I arrived early enough to take advantage of the opportunity to network prior to the official kickoff. It was wonderful to greet friends, meet online acquaintances for the first time and make new connections.

The day followed the traditional ed camp format with a group kickoff to pose questions to form the basis for the days discussion.  The submissions were sorted into groupings and assigned to room locations to facilitate the proceedings of the day.  Each of the discussions I attended was thought provoking:

  •  shift
  • motivating colleagues to change, try new things and take risks when they are reluctant
  • the role of administrators
  • innovation: grass roots, top down, or both
  • what other ingredients are needed for change
  • assessment: do current practices hinder change?
  • the squashing of innovate practice by some of those who fear change and risk taking

Great discussion, no easy answers, nuggets to chew on, things to ponder, take aways to try, ideas to share — awesome!  In addition to the excellent session discussion, three additional conversations are still rattling around in my mind.  One conversation started with Ron Millar and continued with Jenni van Rees  — new ideas for scaling a PD plan for next year.  Hold that thought and perhaps watch for a future blog post.

The second conversation started in the lunch line with Jane Mitchinson and Carlo Fusco, then continued at the lunch table with Ron and Jenni joining us.  We got talking about socialization, the impact of that process and when important conversations become too big and lose focus.  I believe we agreed that one of the hot topics and key elements of change in education right now is the “hot ball” of putting the conditions  of change in place, the shift to technology enabled learning, continued focus on pedagogical improvement and building capacity for change and risk taking. In essence, I believe this synergy  burns brightly because events such as ECOO, the OTRK12 conference,  the Ontario GAFE Summit and this Ed Camp event keep fuelling the flame  for continued learning, sharing and professional reflection.  Sustained energy is SO important right now.

BUT, what happens when the conversations become blurred by the big paint brushes — questions that could take the collective us off our game. Questions that are too big and too general to ever be wrestled to the ground.  Loss of focus would be a major hinderance.  Do people supporting change NOW, have to also be guardians of the focus of the journey?

The third conversation happened after the event – a very engaging conversation with Donna Fry. We talked further about the challenges of creating opportunities for change, and sustaining the energy to keep things going.  Donna has great ideas and big plans for her area — what an amazing educator! I hope I can be a part of the action.

Thanks again to team Ed Camp Hamilton for arranging this successful event.  For those that could not attend, check out the #edcampham twitter stream.  Until the next event, see you online and keep the learning, sharing and reflecting GOING.

Related Resources

Now Thats PD  by  Jane Mitchinson
The revolution will be tweeted … at the Shifting Ideas  blog by Carlo Fusco
Ed Camp Hamilton Reflection by David Fife (www.davidfife.ca)
EdCampHam left me with more questions …. by Karen Wilson

~Mark

Keep the Learning Going

ONgafesummit

The first the ECOO sponsored, Waterloo Region District School Board  hosted Google Apps For Educators (gafe) held on April 20/21 at  was an amazing success. I loved the energy and synergy in the building.  Awesome learning, connecting with new people, reconnecting with friends, solid pedagogical practice, technology as an enabler  and lots of sharing — simply amazing.

What do you do next?  Well, how about attending  Ed Camp Hamilton  on May 4th?   I know the organizers have put a lot of hard work into planning a great day.

edcamp-attending

#edcampham

Will I see you there? 

~Mark

Ontario gafe summit day one

ONgafesummit

Today was an amazing day. After many months of preparation the ECOO sponsored, Waterloo Region District School Board hosted Google Apps For Educators (gafe) event launched at 8:30 this morning. Mark Wagner from the Google Ed Tech team provided a warm welcome and overview from the day. Linda Fabi, Director of Education for the Waterloo Region District School Board delivered greetings to the 525  attendees.

Jim Sill delivered an outstanding keynote address challenging attendees to define the type of world we live in. Jim used effective examples to portray a world of will and reckless creativity, cleverly referencing twitter, sub tweets, selfies, personal branding and digital footprints. I am glad I livescribed this session so I can enjoy listening to it again!

Most of the balance of the day provided a wide variety of  workshop  strands addressing a variety of skill levels. A closing session provided an opportunity to  showcase some awesome tips and clever uses of Google Apps in a 3 minute window. Each presenter concluded with a resounding expression of “SLAM” !

On a personal note, I enjoyed connecting and sharing this experience with so many dedicated educators I know across the province, and of course, meeting new people too.  I learned more about using google maps more effectively, leveraging extensions to Google Drive and tucked away a variety of nifty tips and tricks.

I am looking forward to GAFE day 2 tomorrow!!!

~Mark

 

 

ARMA Workshop Resources

Google Documents for collaboration exercises

Digital Footprint sharing document

Greatest Records Management Challenge sharing document

Article Review sharing document

Related Resources

Todaysmeet  (back channel discussion tool)
ARMA website
ARMA Canada website
ARMA SWO website
Livescribe
Evernote
Evernote and Moleskine
Cloud computing meets K12
Google Chromebook
Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario
Article: Rising Tide of BYOD
Article: Conquering BYOD Challenges
Article: Implementing a Secure BYOD Strategy
Museum of Me   (from Today’s Meet Discussion)